BronYrAur
Mechanical
- Nov 2, 2005
- 799
I have an existing low pressure boiler feed system that is becoming problematic (almost from the start). It is not even 1 year old and we have already lost 2 pump seals and one feed water solenoid.
The system consists of four (4) 4,000 MBH boilers, all fed from a single feed pump (with standby pump). Each boiler has a 2-position solenoid valve that cycles to maintain water level.
At first, the pump did not run continuously, but the demand was causing it to cycle every few seconds. So, we install a small bypass back to the feed tank and ran the pump continuously. This caused an increase in the water hammering effect to the point where we had to provide additional bracing on the feed line. Each boiler has a water hammer arrestor, but that doesn't seem to be helping much.
It has been suggested that this setup is poor and is probably the cause of the pump seal failures. It has also been suggested to install either slow acting solenoids or some other modulating control.
This fix will be an out-of-pocket correction, so I need to be economical. Any ideas on how to best deal with this problem?
The system consists of four (4) 4,000 MBH boilers, all fed from a single feed pump (with standby pump). Each boiler has a 2-position solenoid valve that cycles to maintain water level.
At first, the pump did not run continuously, but the demand was causing it to cycle every few seconds. So, we install a small bypass back to the feed tank and ran the pump continuously. This caused an increase in the water hammering effect to the point where we had to provide additional bracing on the feed line. Each boiler has a water hammer arrestor, but that doesn't seem to be helping much.
It has been suggested that this setup is poor and is probably the cause of the pump seal failures. It has also been suggested to install either slow acting solenoids or some other modulating control.
This fix will be an out-of-pocket correction, so I need to be economical. Any ideas on how to best deal with this problem?